February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines1
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Editor’s Desk Into the Wider Horizon of Civil Services Change is a reality of life. It is happening in the case of EKL too. As its contents and focus are changing I am giving way to the new team of Civil Service Mentors to lead and guide the aspirants by their inspiring messages and informative articles. While wishing the new team all success I take this opportunity to thank all the well wishers who have supported EKL during the last decade. N T Nair, Chief Editor, EKL
ntnair@gmail.com
Towards the Civil Services - Point Blank This is the second issue of EKL in its new avatar. Gradually articles on general knowledge relevant to the Civil Services exam will occupy predominant space. In this issue we have included a number of informative articles by Kalyanasundaram who is a Mentor for Civil Service aspirants. Given below is his message. james_kjoseph@yahoo.co.in
James K. Joseph IA&AS (Retd.) Managing Editor
Civil Services as a Career Option The prestige, power, variety, and a larger canvas to serve the nation attract even today some of the finest young minds to the Civil Services even though the monetary benefits are less compared to the private sector. I am of firm opinion that for Civil Services exams an aspirant has to emotionally identify himself with India, its history, polity, geography, the various phases of economic development; its unity in diversity, its culture, ethos, and so on. Reading the Government of India Year book which is published annually helps a student to have a comprehensive idea about our country. Be very sure before taking the plunge. But once you have made the choice, there should be no looking back. You will face failure, pass through highly depressing stages, doubt your ability to make through, may have to start from square one after reaching up to the last stage. Thus is it a test of your mental strength as much as it is of your intellectual abilities. The whole process of preparation and exam is a life changing one, whether you come out successful or unsuccessful. The future Civil Servant should behave like a winner right from the beginning with indefatigable enthusiasm and indomitable courage. In Civil Services preparations, the journey is the reward. Persist on the journey and victory is yours! All the best!!! K. Kalyanasundaram Mentor February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines3
Nature Line
Cempedak A Food Supplementing Fruit Cempedak, scientifically known as Artocarpus integer or Artocarpus champeden Spreng, is an ever green tree belonging to the same genus as of Jackfruit (EKL Feb.2007) and Breadfruit (EKL Apr. 2007). The term 'Artocarpus' is derived from two Greek words, artos, meaning bread, and karpus, meaning fruit. It is known by many other names like Chempedak, Sempedak, Temedak, Bangkong, Bongkong (Malaysia), Champedak, Chepedak, Chubadak and Kakan (Indonesia). It belongs to the family Moraceae. Native to Southeast Asia, Cempedak is widely grown in Indonesia, Thailand and Malay Peninsula. In India, it grows in the southern states of Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. Cempedak grows in tropical regions where water is available in abundance. Coastal regions provide apt environment for their cultivation. These trees grow up to 20m or more tall, and are found in low-lying rain forests. When it is young, the cempedak tree has smooth bark that grows rough as it ages. The leaves are dull to medium green and have long brown wiry hair on the surface.
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Cempedak fruit is similar to Jackfruit in appearance but smaller in size, and in the way it is used. The fruit may be cylindrical to spherical in shape, and ranges from 10 to 15cm across and 20 to 30cm in length. The outer rind consists of fleshy spines. When cut, the raw fruit secretes sticky latex which can be cleaned off only with vegetable oil rather than with water. On ripening the colour turns from green to yellow or brown. The surface is patterned with pentagons that are either raised protuberances or flat eye facets. The fruit contains over 100 fruitlettes each with a seed within flesh. The soft flesh of the fruitlette can be eaten directly without cooking. The aril surrounding fruitlette is yellowish-white to orange in color, sweet and fragrant, soft, slippery and slimy on the tongue and a bit fibrous. Its flavor is musky, aromatic and savory that resembles durian (EKL Apr.2012) and mango. The seeds are flattened spheres or elongated, about 2–3cm in length. It is the pulpy fruitlettes within the fruit that is sought after for its fragrance and taste. The hard seeds within fruitlettes are also cooked and eaten. Ripe cempedak fruit is yellow in color and the fruitlettes are sweeter than those of jackfruit. It has many medicinal benefits owing to its high nutritional profile. It has significant content of ascorbic acid, enzymes, bioflavonoid, minerals and vitamins. Most of these local varieties are derivatives from the wild variety locally called bangkong, native to Peninsular Malaysia. This was improved to obtain cultivated varieties by selection and propagation through grafting. Cultivated cempedak is found throughout the Malayan archipelago. In Malaysia, cempedak is commercially grown in the state of Kedah and Perak. Use as Food and Nutrient The fruit is very popular in Southeast Asia. The flesh can be eaten fresh or after being processed. Fritters made by dipping arils in batter and frying in oil are sold in the streets of Malaysia. They taste similar to water chestnuts. The young fruit can be used as a vegetable. But the sweet honey nectar flavor of a ripe cempedak is what makes it far more superior than a jackfruit. Seeds of this fruit can be roasted and eaten, as can the flesh around the seeds. The flesh is also used for making jams and cakes, and can be salted to make a form of jerky. Whole fruits when raw are also cooked and eaten. In Malaysia, the tree is grown commercially for food. The outside skin of ripe cempedak fruit can be removed with hand and fruitlettes can be extracted. Cempedak's pulpy flesh and its hard seed are February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines5
edible. The flesh is eaten fresh or cooked, fried or the pulp creamed to be used in making jams and cakes. The flesh is salted to make a pickle called jerami. The hard seeds are boiled or roasted and eaten, a popular practice amongst the Malayan jungle tribes. Besides the flesh and seed, the young leaves and whole young fruits are cooked as vegetables. It has been found that cempedak seeds can be ground into flour and used as an alternative to bread flour. It has more dietary fiber content, more nutrients and lower glycemic index as compared to other bread flours. The seeds can be fried, boiled or grilled and then peeled and eaten with a little salt mixture. In Borneo, the skin of the cempedak is processed into a food called mandai or dami. Mandai is made by peeling the fruit until it looks white, then soaking the skin in brine to preserve and soften the texture. Medicinal Use The energy content of 100g cempedak is 117 Kcal. The water content is 66.7g and carbohydrates 25.8g. Other constituents in significant proportions are protein, fat, fiber, antioxidants, calcium, phosphorus, iron, potassium, carotene, vitamins A, B1, B2, C and niacin. Presence of these elements is helpful in maintaining heart health, eye health and digestive health, preventing urinary tract infection, tumors and cancers, and controlling obesity. The bark of cempedak tree contains components that prevent tumors and malaria. It also contains heteriflavon C used to eliminate the cause of malaria parasites fully. Also the decoction of cempedak roots is used to cure fever, skin diseases, asthma and diarrhea. The antioxidant nature slows the degeneration of cells and thus keeps skin healthy. Cempedak has been found to show anti-arthritic properties too. It also helps in lowering anxiety and hypertension. Other uses The chempedak tree is cultivated also for its wood, which is durable and resistant to termites. It is used for building houses and making home furniture and boats. Young timber can be ground and used as a yellow dye although a darker brown can be derived from older trees. In Indo-China, this yellow dye was used to dye the robes of Buddhist priests. The fibrous bark of young trees can also be used for making ropes while the latex is used for making lime. [CGS] 6ď ŽExecutive Knowledge Linesď ŽFebruary 2016
Space Line
A Black Tuesday The Challenger Disaster It was an unusually cold morning on January 28, 1986 at the Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral, Florida, USA. The Space Shuttle Challenger lifted off at 11:39 AM, Eastern Standard Time (10½ hours behind IST). This mission had a special distinction – the 7-member crew included a 37-year old school teacher, Christa McAuliffe, touted as the first “teacher in space”. She was to give lessons from space to students below. The other crew members were all professional astronauts– Gregory Jarvis, Judy Resnik, Dick Scobee, Ronald McNair, Michael Smith and Ellison Onizuka. Postponed several times since July 1985 for various reasons, this mission followed 24 consecutive successful ones starting with Columbia launched in April 1981. There was, evidently, an air of complacency all around. The world shook with terror when 73 seconds after lift-off Challenger blew into a huge ball of fire and a forking plume of smoke. It broke into pieces and plunged into the ocean killing the entire crew. NASA fell into a turmoil from which it took nearly three years to recover. Later that day, President Reagan gave a touching speech (see Box).
President Ronald Reagan, January 28, 1986 “Nineteen years ago, almost to the day, we lost three astronauts in a terrible accident on the ground. But, we've never lost an astronaut in flight; we've never had a tragedy like this. And perhaps we've forgotten the courage it took for the crew of the shuttle; but they, the Challenger Seven, were aware of the dangers, but overcame them and did their jobs brilliantly. We mourn seven heroes: Michael Smith, Dick Scobee, Judith Resnik, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Gregory Jarvis, and Christa McAuliffe. We mourn their loss as a nation together. For the families of the seven, we cannot bear, as you do, the full impact of this tragedy. But we feel the loss, and we're thinking about you so very much. Your loved ones were daring and brave, and they had that special grace, that special spirit that says, 'Give me a challenge and I'll February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines7
meet it with joy.' They had a hunger to explore the universe and discover its truths. They wished to serve, and they did. They served all of us. We've grown used to wonders in this century. It's hard to dazzle us. But for twenty-five years the United States space program has been doing just that. We've grown used to the idea of space, and perhaps we forget that we've only just begun. We're still pioneers. They, the members of the Challenger crew, were pioneers. And I want to say something to the school children of America who were watching the live coverage of the shuttle's takeoff. I know it is hard to understand, but sometimes painful things like this happen. It's all part of the process of exploration and discovery. It's all part of taking a chance and expanding man's horizons. The future doesn't belong to the fainthearted; it belongs to the brave. The Challenger crew was pulling us into the future, and we'll continue to follow them... There's a coincidence today. On this day 390 years ago, the great explorer Sir Francis Drake died aboard ship off the coast of Panama. In his lifetime the great frontiers were the oceans, and a historian later said, 'He lived by the sea, died on it, and was buried in it.' Well, today we can say of the Challenger crew: Their dedication was, like Drake's, complete. The crew of the space shuttle Challenger honored us by the manner in which they lived their lives. We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for the journey and waved goodbye and slipped the surly bonds of earth* to touch the face of God*.” *The expressions ‘slipped the surly bonds of the earth’ and ‘touch the face of God’ were borrowed from a short poem, “High Flight”, by a young pilot, John Gillespie Magee Jr. He wrote it on September 3, 1941 as soon as he returned to ground after a high altitude (30,000 feet) test flight of a new model of the Spitfire V, and sent it to his parents. The Presidential Enquiry Commission (Rogers Commission) conducted detailed failure analysis and submitted its report in June 1986. The Commission included, among others, Nobel laureate Richard Feynman, the first-man-on-the-moon Neil Armstrong and the first US woman-astronaut Sally Ride. The investigation traced the cause of failure to a rubber O-ring seal in one of the Solid Rocket Boosters that had lost its elastic properties due to the month-long exposure to severe cold environment while waiting on the launch pad. The ineffective seal let hot 8Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
exhaust gas leak out from the solid rocket that punctured, as with a flame torch, the neighboring thin-walled tank containing liquid Hydrogen and Oxygen. The result – a veritable bomb! Before the launch, some engineers had indeed expressed their misgivings about the deteriorated O-rings, but were overruled by their managers who seemed to be in a hurry to launch after several annoying postponements. By hindsight the decision to launch was clearly flawed! Had they known the pertinent facts and their implications, the decision-makers would not have approved the launch on that fateful day! To be sure, the Challenger disaster was a jolt to the complacency that had set in NASA over the years. It did change many things including the work culture. NASA was struck with the realization that the business of spaceflight allowed no room for complacency and laxity! NASA ordered Space Shuttle scrutinized thread bare. The investigation also revealed several previously unsuspected design deficiencies. All design deficiencies corrected and Space Shuttle recertified, Discovery lifted off on September 29, 1988, marking the return of Space Shuttle program after an excruciating interval of 32 months. Once again on February 1, 2003, misfortune struck Columbia minutes before its return to the earth, killing seven astronauts (including India-born Kalpana Chawla). The reason was the detachment of thermal insulation material stuck to the belly of the spacecraft to protect it from intense heat. Such disasters remind us that spaceflight are, no doubt, risky. Space Shuttles went into retirement in mid-2011 after long, laudable service. They are now adorning various museums. Among the thousands who watched the Challenger tragedy, there was one waiting for a berth in a later flight in September, 1986. The dream of a spaceflight instantly fell into a heap of ashes in his heart. 30 years on, that heart is ticking inside this writer. [PR is P. Radhakrishnan former scientist, retired from Indian Space Research Organisation in 2003. He was selected in 1985 to be the first astronaut from India to fly in the US Space Shuttle and underwent training at IAF Facilities in India and later at NASA. But consequent to the Space Shuttle (Challenger) disaster in January 1986, his space flight was cancelled. PR is in the Editorial Board of EKL and is a regular contributor of articles.] February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines9
Heritage Line
Cave Art Masterpieces of Yore India rightly boasts of a rich cultural heritage dating back to hoary times. It embraces diverse disciplines of which painting is one aspect. Cave painting is the earliest form of this art, dating back to prehistoric times probably 30,000 BCE. Cave paintings in India span an extensive period of time starting from the prehistoric era till the 8th-10th centuries CE. The Bhimbhetka Rock Shelters These prehistoric paintings can be found in the caves of Central India, an important instance of this being the Bhimbetka rock shelters in Madhya Pradesh near Indore. There are about 700 of these shelters with more than 400 of them depicting paintings. These paintings, which cover a long span of time ranging from prehistoric times to the medieval era, portray images of animals such as elephant, rhinoceros, boar, barasingha, spotted deer, cattle and snake. One of these shelters, the Boar Rock, depicts a legendary boar chasing a man. The aniBhimbhetka Rock Painting mal has horns which are much larger than its human victim. Another interesting painting is that of a red boar which dates back to the Mesolithic period. Human activities such as hunting, dancing and household activities have also been portrayed in these paintings. These images depict the lives of the people who lived there during these thousands of years. Edakkal Caves Carvings were another form of art during prehistoric times in India. An important instance of this art form can be found in the Edakkal Caves in north Kerala, near Sulthan Bathery. These carvings, which date back 10ď ŽExecutive Knowledge Linesď ŽFebruary 2016
Rock Carvings of Edakkal Caves
to the prehistoric era, comprise stone scripts, weapons, several animal and human figures. Among the various designs depicted on the walls, there are geometrical shapes such as squares, triangles and crosses. Then there are various other drawings such as stars, spirals, wheels, along with figures of humans and animals such as deer and an elephant. The human images on the wall include those of a tribal king, a queen, a child, a figure adorned with headgear and another on a wheel cart. Inscriptions in the ancient Tamil Brahmi script add to the historical significance of these caves. Excavations at the Edakkal caves have yielded a number of relics which indicate the possibility that this site had links with the IndusValley civilization. Ajanta Caves The Ajanta Caves in Aurangabad, Maharashtra were carved out of volcanic rock. Their relative proximity to the ancient trade routes enabled pilgrims and traders to visit them. This in turn helped to spread their fame to countries as far off as Japan and China. The frescoes of the Ajanta Caves are world famous for their art style. Dating right back to the 3rd century BC these frescoes portray the court life and the costumes and ornaments of those times. The pictures on walls of the Ajanta caves also depict Buddha’s life and teachings. These were done by artists who were employed by Buddhist monks to carry out the task. These murals depict mythical beings such as yakshis, nagas and vrikshikas. The oldest painting in Indian history can be found in one of these caves. It dates back to the 1st century BC. Most of the paintings however belong to the 5th century AD. The Ajanta caves frescoes are based on the life of the Jain Tirthankara Mahavira. Court life, feasting, processions, men and women at work were also featured in these paintings. The frescoes were done on wet plaster so that the colours could get fixed onto it when it dried up. First, two coats of mud plaster were applied to fill the porous rocks and these were then topped by lime plaster. The outline of the painting was done in red ochre after which the colours were filled in. The outline was then again redone in deep red, black or brown. Shading was added to give a three-dimensional effect. Tourists to this site are permitted to take photographs with flash light. Unfortunately this has damaged the paintings to a minor extent. February 2016 ď ŽExecutive Knowledge Linesď Ž11
Ellora Caves The Ellora Caves present a wonderful example of the rich cultural heritage of India. Owing to the masterpieces here which portray the tradition of the country, these cave temples have been declared as a World Heritage Site. They are situated in Aurangabad, Maharashtra. The 34 cave temples of Ellora were carved out of solid rock. These cave temples belong to the Hindu, Buddhist and Jain religious orders. Situated in the Chamadari hills, these three groups of temples were built during three different periods in history. The Buddhist temples were built during 200-600 AD, the Hindu group during 500-900 AD while the construction of the Jain shrines was carried out during 800-1000 AD. There are about 12 temples which belong to the Buddhist period. The carvings, paintings, sculptures and murals depict the life of Lord Buddha. The 12th cave is a grand three-storeyed structure. Many impressive images of Buddha can be found in these caves. The Hindu temples are located in 17 of the 34 caves. A profusion of carvings and sculptures portraying apsaras, tree nymphs, animal motifs, trees, plants, gods and goddesses can be found in these cave temples. A number of intricately-carved pillars also adorn these caves. The famous Kailas temple is located in the 16th cave. The largest monolith can be found in this cave which is also adorned with mural paintings. The remaining five Jain temples are decorated with images of mythological figures. It took about five centuries to complete the construction of the Ellora Caves. India can boast of the highest number of rock-cut cave temples stretching right from the southern extremes to the Himalayas. No other country can compete with it in this regard. [Padma Mohan Kumar]
EKL Sudoku 111 [Hard]
Improve your concentration. Use reasoning and fill each row, column and 3 x 3 grid in bold borders with each of the digits from 1 to 9. Solution on page 31
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6
4
1 8
5 2 6 1 8 2 6 3 9 3 1 6 5 9 4 2 8 3 8 4 7 6 1 9
Nature Line
Chembarathi Ayurveda’s secret for beauty and good health Chembarathi or the Hibiscus is a beautiful plant with its glossy bright green leaves and deep red flowers. The plant species name is “rosa-sinensis” which means, “Chinese rose.” It is also called “shoe flower” because the flowers were traditionally used to polish shoes in Jamaica and some African countries. This flower is predominant in almost all parts of India and China. There are over 5000 hybrid varieties. In India, the hibiscus is considered an auspicious flower commonly known as Japa pushpa. It is used in Hindu religious ceremonies to worship the Goddess. The Ancient Indian system of medicine, Ayurveda has also recognized the importance of the plant to treat and prevent a variety of medical conditions. In Kerala, the chembarathi has been a part of everyday life. There are many uses of hibiscus, including beauty tips, medicines and dyes. For the medicinal purpose, red flower variety is mostly preferred. Flowers not only give happiness and joy to the senses, but also health to the body. Flowers of these plants are rich in polyphenols, flavonoids and anthocyanins. What most of us are unaware of is that they also contribute to our health in various ways. ‘The American Journal of Phytomedicine and Clinical Therapeutics’ reports that it possesses various pharmacological activities. The flowers contain anthocyanins, cyanidin diglucosides, carotene, thiamine, riboflavin, niacin and ascorbic acid. The extracts have a protective effect against tumours. Hibiscus has been used in Siddha medicine for many centuries. It is considered a laxative, aphrodisiac, and an emmenagogue (stimulates menstruation). It is a blood purifier and is good for curing cystitis (inflammation of the bladder), cough, syphilis, and gonorrhoea. It is also said to be a very good natural source of vitamin C. Every part of the Hibiscus is beneficial. The mucilaginous leaves are emollient and also act as a soothing cough remedy. The extracts of the flowers are used for treatment of high blood pressure and liver disorders. The herbal tea of Hibiscus contains vitamin C, which helps fight cold and cough. In short, the medicinal benefits of this herb are amazing and it is believed to purify the body both physically and spiritually. February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines13
In Ayurveda, Hibiscus is known as one of the best secrets to beautiful and healthy hair. Hibiscus promotes hair growth, stops hair fall, gives hair a healthy lustre with bounce, and delays premature greying. The flower and leaf extracts are used to regulate the menstrual cycle and to treat problems related to the menstrual cycle in women. At the same time, Hibiscus flowers are reported to possess anti-fertility properties too. The root yields a drug which Ayurveda believes to be useful in treating venereal disease. Hibiscus Tea is an excellent remedy for many disorders as well as a preventive since the anthocyanins present are very good antioxidants. It also contains amino acids, vitamins and bioflavonoids which are beneficial to good health. Hibiscus tea has the ability to lower blood pressure, especially in patients with mild to moderate hypertension. It contains an enzyme inhibitor which acts to block amylase production. Amylase is an enzyme which breaks down starches into sugars. The amylase inhibitor found in hibiscus tea will reduce the amount of sugars that are absorbed into the body, thus resulting in weight loss. The antioxidants found in hibiscus tea have been compared to red wine, which has positive effects on cardiac health. However, there are certain precautions that must be observed too. People with low blood pressure should not take Hibiscus extracts. Home remedies • It cools the body and is said to be good for psychiatric ailments. • A decoction of the hibiscus flower, milk, jaggery and carom seeds are good for leucorrhoea. • About 5 hibiscus flowers ground to a paste, and consumed with water every morning on an empty stomach, for a week before the expected date of periods helps to regularise periods. • Take the petals of one hibiscus flower and grind them. Mix this paste in a glass of buttermilk and drink it as a natural coolant for summers. Simply chewing a few hibiscus petals and then drinking water helps cure ulcers. • Eating the flowers in the morning, on an empty stomach, purifies blood. • A couple of petals of the hibiscus flower every night totally cure constipation. • The leaves when ground to a paste with fenugreek seeds and water, can be used as a shampoo and conditioner for hair. • 8 to 10 hibiscus flowers soaked in 1 ½ litres of water overnight and consumed three to four times a day for 2 to 3 days (about 2 tbsp at a time) is good for urinary diseases. • The oil in this flower can be applied to the skin of patients who are 14Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
suffering from cellulite which makes the skin to glow
• According to traditional medicine if we eat the buds of hibiscus flowers
early in the morning on empty stomach it should cure all the diseases. We can mix sugar if we are unable to eat directly. • The roots of hibiscus are boiled in oil until the water gets evaporated. Then the oil can be applied to the wounds caused by cancer. This can be very useful in initial stage of cancer. • According to the traditional medicine, the flowers of Hibiscus can be dried in the shade of Neem tree. Then they can be powdered and it can be used to fight all cancers. • It is good for increasing blood count among anaemic people. The flowers are boiled in a little water and blended in a mixer with roasted cumin seeds and salt and consumed after diluting it to the required level, for increasing the quantity of haemoglobin. Precautions: Though, it does not have any strong side effects, persons who are allergic to hibiscus should not consume it. [Dr. Annette Fernandez, Associate Professor in Chemistry, College of Engineering, Trivandrum]
Governance Line
Governance
In the Time of Kautilya Chanakya was an Indian teacher, philosopher, economist, jurist and royal advisor. He is traditionally identified as Kautilya or Vishnu Gupta, who authored the ancient Indian political treatise, the Arthasastra (Economics). As such, he is considered as the pioneer of the field of political science and economics in India, and his work is thought of as an important precursor to classical economics. His works were lost near the end of the Gupta Empire and not rediscovered until 1915. Originally a teacher at the ancient university of Takshashila, Chanakya assisted the first Mauryan emperor Chandragupta in his rise to power. He is widely credited for having played an important role in the establishment of the Maurya Empire. Chanakya served as the chief advisor to both emperors Chandragupta and his son Bindusara. Kautilya’s Arthasastra, the ancient Indian classic of governance, has been gaining increasing attention of Indologists all over the world, in recent years. February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines15
It gives a mine of information regarding the actual practice of governance and outlines a picture of an ideal system of efficient administration. EKL had carried a series of articles by N S Mannadiar on Arthasastra. Some of the highlights are given in the following paragraphs. There was no pretence of any form of democracy during the period of Kautilya and the king was the central point of power. He had to take care of the welfare of the people with the help of competent councillors and officials carefully selected by him. He protected the people not only from an outside enemy, but also from his own officials and traders. Kautilya describes forty ways of embezzlement by government officials and nine methods of exploitation by merchants, craftsmen and entertainers and suggests methods to prevent such misdeeds and punish the guilty. There is a startling revelation in the treatise, which ordains death for person selling human flesh. The inference is that the sale of human flesh might have been so rampant so as to warrant its inclusion in the penal code. One of the notable features is that health and education, the two prestigious programmes of present day governments are conspicuous in Arthasastra chiefly by their absence. Among the thirty and odd heads of departments listed in the text, there is no mention of any head of department either for health or for education. The discussion on education is confined to the training of princes and the treatise is silent about common man's education. Similarly, health is mentioned only with reference to public hygiene. Even though physicians and midwives have been mentioned, nothing is said about their qualifications or training. This would show that the state concentrated more on preventive measures rather than cure. Education especially the professional skills and the art of treatment, it appears, had developed independently as an integral part of social life, firmly rooted in family traditions, as a result of which the government had only a corrective role to play in these sectors.
Points to Ponder
Chandragupta Maurya was the founder of the Maurya Empire and the first Emperor to unify most of Greater India into one state. There is a school of thought that the Great Indian empire could have expanded further of Asoka had continued his father's aggressive policy and India would have been a global power and Indian history would have been entirely different. 16Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Governance Line
Unemployment Different Types An important objective of development planning in India has been to provide for gainful employment opportunities. The level, quality and growth of wages, incomes and employment in the economy is affected by the overall growth in the economy as measured by GDP, as also growth in population and consequent additions to the labour force. Thus, growth is the primary driver of employment. The employment created is more if growth is planned in a labour intensive way. A number of specifically designed poverty alleviation programmes are in operation in rural and urban areas in order to encourage self and wage employment. Types of Unemployment • Demand-deficient or Cyclical unemployment • Seasonal unemployment • Frictional or Search unemployment • Structural unemployment Demand-deficient or cyclical unemployment: Demand-deficient unemployment occurs when there is not enough demand to employ all those who want to work. It is also often known as cyclical unemployment because it will vary with the trade cycle. When the economy is booming, there will be much demand and so firms will be employing large numbers of workers. Demand-deficient unemployment will at this stage of the cycle be fairly low. If the economy slows down, then demand will begin to fall. When this happens firms will begin to lay workers off as they do not need to produce so much. Demand-deficient unemployment rises. The behaviour of demand-deficient unemployment will exactly mirror the trade cycle. The job losses reported in the after math of the global recession since 2008 in India and elsewhere is an example. Seasonal unemployment: Seasonal unemployment is fairly self explanatory. In India agricultural employment is linked to monsoon and its behaviour. If there is a monsoon failure, unemployment results .The effects of seasonal unemployment are often highly regionalised. Frictional or search unemployment: When a person loses his job or chooses to leave it, he/she will have t look for another one. On average it will take everybody a reasonable period of time as they search for the right job. This creates unemployment while they search. The more efficiently the job market is matching people February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines17
to jobs, the lower this form of unemployment will be. However, if there is imperfect information frictional unemployment will be higher. The better the economy is doing, the lower this type of unemployment is likely to be. This is because people will usually be able to find jobs that suit them more quickly when the economy is doing well. Structural unemployment: Structural unemployment occurs when the structure of industry changes. As an economy develops over time the type of industries may well change. This may be because people’s tastes have changed or it may be because technology has moved on and the product or service is no longer in demand. In the developed countries like the UK many industries that were once major employers have now all but disappeared. Shipbuilding and mining are prime examples, but there are also many more minor examples as well. Structural unemployment occurs when a labour market is unable to provide jobs for everyone who wants one because there is a mismatch between the skills of the unemployed workers and the skills needed for the available jobs. Much technological unemployment (e.g. due to the replacement of workers by machines) might be counted as structural unemployment. Alternatively, technological unemployment might refer to the way in which steady increases in labour productivity mean that fewer workers are needed to produce the same level of output every year. Technological unemployment has historically been temporary and the economy has adapted and created jobs in other sectors, however, some analysts argue that many jobs in the economy will ultimately be automated via advancing technologies such as robotics and artificial intelligence resulting in substantial, permanent structural unemployment. The massive drive for skilling being witnessed in India is to address structural unemployment. The statistics on employment and unemployment can be collected either through censuses of population and economic establishments and national level sample surveys, or through returns under various Acts relating to regulation of economic establishments regarding workers, etc. Employment Exchanges recording job seekers, etc., can be another source. Provision of increasing, employment opportunities both in urban and rural areas to solve the problem of. unemployment has been recognized as an important objective of economic planning in India. Large expansion in employment opportunities, utilizing fully the manpower resources of the country and ensuring a substantial expansion in employment opportunities and expansion of productive employment have been pronounced as important objectives in various Five Year Plans. 18ď ŽExecutive Knowledge Linesď ŽFebruary 2016
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The leader’s job is to see the best in human beings who have never caught sight of the best within themselves.
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Governance Line
Monetary Policy Its Growing Importance The growing importance of monetary policy in the management of the economy during the era of globalization is a fact. Generally, democratically elected governments resist to use fiscal policy to fight inflation as it requires government to take unpopular actions like reducing spending or raising taxes. The option of cutting indirect taxes is a limited one and is used rarely as it was done in 2009. Political realities favor a bigger role for monetary policy during times of inflation and deflation/disinflation (deflation is drop in prices and disinflation is drop in the rate of growth of prices). Fiscal policy may be more suited to fighting unemployment as the government can step up spending to create public works an4 in the process jobs; while monetary policy may be more effective in fighting inflation/deflation. There is a limit to how much monetary policy can do to help the economy during a period of severe economic crisis. The monetary policy remedy to economic decline is to increase the amount of money in circulation by cutting interest rates and increasing the money supply: for example, during the 2008-09 economic downturn worldwide including India. But once interest rates reach zero or near zero, the central bank can do no more- economists call it the “liquidity trap,” what Japan did during the late 1990s. That is, liquidity is trapped in banks- banks do not want to lend as credit may turn into bad asset. Businesses do not want to borrow as demand has slumped. It is a classical case of liquidity trap and was seen all over the world including India in the current downturn-2008-09. With its economy stagnant and interest rates near zero, many economists argued that the Japanese government had to resort to more aggressive fiscal policy, if necessary, running up a sizable government deficit to spur renewed spending and economic growth. Monetary policy proved to be of no real value then. When reduced rates do not help, unconventional step are taken as in the USA where the Federal Reserve (its central bank) resorted to quantitative easing. Monetary policy has grown from simply increasing the money supply to keep up with both population growth and economic activity. It must now take into account such diverse factors as: February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines23
• Signals to the economy by way of rate and reserve adjustment • exchange rates; • credit quality; • international capital flows of money on large scales; With globalization and the increase in the flow of funds- highly speculative in character, monetary policy acquires unprecedented importance for the country. The following will illustrate the point further that globalization challenges monetary policy: Management of the exchange is a crucial part of the monetary policy as exchange rate holds the key to many important macro economic goals and dictates foreign flows- inflows and outflows. It has a close bearing on money supply and inflation and interest rates. For instance, if foreign inflows flood the country, in order to maintain its monetary stability, RBI has buy the foreign currency to save the rupee from excessive appreciation. The rupee that is printed has to be sucked out with Government securities as otherwise it will be inflationary. Similarly when the Fed of the USA takes up quantitative easing, foreign inflows can create huge challenges for us. The Market Stabilization Bond Scheme in India was started as a sterilization attempt in 2004. Under the MSS, RBI generates government securities to sterilize excess liquidity in the market to prevent inflation. Such sterilization can be expensive as the money so sucked out costs by way of the interest paid on it. Thus, the purpose of stemming rupee appreciation leads to excess of money supply which could inflate the economy unless sterilised with the direct intervention (selling MSBs) which is a costly process. Hike in interest rates and CRR may also become necessary- it hurts growth even as it reduces inflation. The latter was seen in India in the 2006-08 period. Developing countries and Monetary Policy Developing countries have problems operating monetary policy effectively. The primary difficulty is that fiscal policy of the Government sets priorities and the Central bank is not actively involved in decisions related to money supply through borrowings. The welfare schemes; foreign trade policy, tax policy etc are the privilege of the central government and the central bank largely acts to support the same. Further, few developing countries have deep markets in government debt. Thus, the OMOs have limited value. In India, situation is improving with RBI being given importance after economic reforms started early in the 1990’s. The introduction of WMAs for the central government; FRBM Act 2003 etc gave autonomy to the RBI and a consultative role to it. So does the FSDC set up in 2010- Financial Stability and Development Council. 24Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Governance Line
Writs in India Provisions in the Constitution The Indian Constitution empowers the Supreme Court to issue writs for enforcement of any of the fundamental rights conferred by Part III of Indian Constitution under Article 32. Thus the power to issue writs is primarily a provision made to make available the Right to Constitutional Remedies to every citizen. The Right to Constitutional Remedies, as we know, is a guarantor of all other fundamental rights available to the people of India. In addition to the above, the Constitution also provides for the Parliament to confer on the Supreme Court power to issue writs, for the purposes other than those mentioned above. Similarly High Courts in India are also empowered to issue writs for the enforcement of any of the rights conferred by Part III and for any other purpose. Types of Writs There are five types of writs: 1. Habeas Corpus: A writ of habeas corpus is in the nature of an order calling upon the person who has detained another, to produce the latter before the Court in order to let the Court know on what ground she/ he has been confined and to set him/her free if there is no legal justification for the imprisonment. The words ‘habeas corpus’ literally mean ‘you may have the body’. The writ may be addressed to any person whatever, an official or a private person who has another person in his custody and disobedience to the writ is met with punishment for the contempt of the court. The different purposes for which the writ of habeas corpus can be issued are: (a) for the enforcement of fundamental rights, (b) to decide whether the order of imprisonment or detention is ultra vires the statute that authorises the imprisonment or detention. The writ of habeas corpus is, however, not issued in the following cases: (i) Where the person against whom the writ is issued or the person who is detained is not within the jurisdiction of the Court, (ii) To secure the release of a person who has been imprisoned by a court of law on a criminal charge, (iii) To interfere with a proceeding for contempt by a court of record or by the Parliament. 2. Mandamus: Mandamus literally means ‘we command.’ It commands the person, to whom it is addressed to perform some public or quasi-public legal duty which she/he has refused to perform and the performance of which cannot be enforced by any other adequate legal remedy. It is, therefore, clear that mandamus will not be issued unless the applicant February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines25
has a legal right for the performance of that particular legal duty of a public nature and the party against whom the writ is sought, is bound to perform that duty. The purposes for which a writ may be issued are as: (a) For the enforcement of fundamental rights. Whenever a public officer or a Government has acted in a manner violating the Fundamental Right of a person, the court would issue a writ of mandamus restraining the public officer or the Government from enforcing that order or acting against the person whose fundamental right has been infringed, (b) Mandamus can be issued by a High Court for various other purposes, e.g., (i) To enforce the performance of a statutory duty where in a public officer has got a power conferred by the Constitution or a statute. The Court may issue a mandamus directing him/her to exercise the power in case she/he refuses to do so. (ii) To compel a person to perform his public duty where the duty is imposed by the Constitution or a statute or a statutory instrument, (iii) To compel a court or judicial tribunal to exercise its jurisdiction when it has refused to exercise it. (iv) To direct a public official or the Government, not to enforce a law that is unconstitutional. 3. Prohibition: The writ of prohibition is a writ issued by the Supreme Court or a High Court to an inferior court forbidding the latter to continue proceedings therein in excess of its jurisdiction or to usurp a jurisdiction with which, it is legally not vested. The writ of prohibition differs from the writ of mandamus in the sense that while mandamus commands activity, prohibition commands inactivity. Further, while mandamus is available not only against judicial authorities but also against administrative authorities, prohibition as well as certiorari are issued only against judicial or quasi- judicial authorities. 4. Certiorari: The literal meaning of the word ‘certiorari’ is “to be more fully informed of”. Though prohibition and certiorari are both issued against Courts or tribunals exercising judicial or quasi-judicial powers, certiorari is issued to quash the order or decision of the tribunal while prohibition is issued to prohibit the tribunal from an ultra vires order or decision. While prohibition is available at an earlier stage, certiorari is available at a later stage, on similar grounds. The object of both is to secure that the jurisdiction of an inferior court or tribunal is properly exercised and to see that it does not usurp the jurisdiction for which it does not possess an authority. 5. Quo Warranto: Quo warranto is a proceeding whereby the court enquires into the legality 26Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
of the claim which a party asserts to a public office, and to oust him/her from its enjoyment if the claim is found to be fake or invalid. The conditions necessary for the issue of a writ of quo warranto are as follows: (i) The office must be public and it must be created by statute or by the Constitution itself; (ii) The office must be a substantive one and not merely the function or employment of a servant at the will and during the pleasure of another. (iii) There has been a contravention of the Constitution or a statute or statutory instrument, in appointing such a person to that office. The fundamental basis of the proceeding of quo warranto is that the public has an interest to see that an unlawful claimant does not usurp a public office. It is, however, a discretionary remedy that the court may grant or refuse according to the facts, and circumstances in each case. Quo warranto is thus a very powerful instrument for safeguarding against the usurpation of public offices.
EKL Online Version Cost of two year subscription for online edition is only Rs. 300 compared to Rs 400 for the print version for one year. Here is an attractive proposal to our valued readers: You can switch over to online edition of EKL by sending a request to us by email or post and we will convert your print subscription to online within two months. Most likely, you may not be required to pay any money now, as adjusting the balance amount, if available in your account, may be adequate for some months. email: eklines@gmail.com Postal address: Manager, EKL Knowledge House Mathrubhumi Road, Trivandrum 695 035 Ph: 0471 2472928 Looking forward to hear from our valued subscribers about this proposal, With Best Wishes EKL Team February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines27
Governance Line
14th Finance Commission Major Recommendations
The Fourteenth Finance Commission (FFC) was appointed on 2ndJanuary, 2013under the chairmanship of Dr. Y. V. Reddy. In addition to the primary objectives mentioned above, the terms of reference for the commission sought suggestions regarding the principles which would govern the quantum and distribution of grants-in-aid (non plan grants to states), the measures, if needed, to augment State government finances to supplement the resources of local government and to review the state of the finances, deficit and debt conditions at different levels of government. Major Recommendations of FFC The FFC has submitted its recommendations for the period 2015-16 to 2020-21. They are likely to have major implications for center-state relations, for budgeting by, and the fiscal situation of, the center and the states. Some of the major recommendations are as follows: 1) The FFC has radically enhanced the share of the states in the central divisible pool from the current 32 percent to 42 per cent which is the biggest ever increase in vertical tax devolution. The last two Finance Commissions viz. Twelfth (period 2005- 10) and Thirteenth (period 2010-15) had recommended a state share of 30.5 per cent (increase of 1 percent) and 32 per cent (increase of 1.5 percent), respectively in the central divisible pool. 2) Eight Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS) delinked from support from the Centre. Finance Commission has identified over 30 CSS schemes to be delinked from Centre’s support but all have not yet been delinked considering the national priorities and legal obligations. 3) Sharing pattern under various CSS to undergo a change, with States sharing higher fiscal responsibility for scheme implementation. 4) Distribution of grants to States for local bodies based on 2011 population data (90% weight) and area (10% weight) 5) Revenue compensation to States under GST should be for five years; 100% in first three years, 75% in fourth year and 50% in fifth year. 6) Create an autonomous and independent ‘GST Compensation Fund’ through legislative actions to facilitate the compensation process. 7) Suggesting a fiscal consolidation roadmap, FFC puts a ceiling on fiscal deficit at 3% of GDP from 2016-17 onwards. 8) Some flexible provisions for State’s borrowings over and above the annual limit of fiscal deficit at 3% of GSDP. 9) Establish an independent Fiscal Council to undertake ex-ante assessment of fiscal policy implications of budget proposals and their consistency with fiscal policy and rules. 10) Suitably amend Electricity Act 2003 to facilitate levy of penalties for delays in payment of subsidies by the State Governments. 11) Have independent regulators for road sector for tariff setting, quality regulation, among other functions. 12) Several recommendations made for evaluating government’s ownership, disinvestment in Central Public Sector Enterprises 28Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Volume 11 Issue 7 February 2016 Chief Editor N T Nair
Marketing Director V S Prasanna Kumar (VSP)
Technical Editor Dr B N Nair
Advertising and Subscriptions S N Nair
Editorial Board Prof. V K Damodaran P R Chandran Prof. Harimohan Bhattathiri R Narayanan (RN) P Radhakrishnan (PR) Advisory Committee Dr D S Rane Dr P M Mathew (Vellore) Dr V Nandamohan Authentication Editors Dr C G Sukumaran Nair (CGS) Simon Zachariah
Consultants
Finance R Bhadrakumar FCA Production Ravisankar K V
Representatives
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Editorial Office Knowledge House, Mathrubhumi Road, Trivandrum 695 035, India. Contact: Vandana P S, Manager(Knowledge Operations), Tel. 91 471 247 2928 email: ekl@knowledgelines.com eklines@gmail.com www.knowledgelines.com
Looking Back at EKL
• Mushroom Biotechnology: Green Alternative for Packaging – EKL Dec. 2012 • Pista Nut: To Siege Taste-buds – EKL Jan. 2013 • 3D Printing Goes to Space: Zero-gravity Not a Deterrent – EKL Jul. 2013 • Antibiotics: Actions and Reactions – EKL Jan. 2014 • 400 Years of Logarithm: A Mathematical Marvel – EKL Aug. 2014 February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines29
Indian History
1857 Revolt – Some Relevant Information The Revolt of 1857 refers to a rebellion in India against the rule of the British East India Company, that ran from May 1857 to June 1858. Given below are some relevant information. 1. The 1857 Revolt started at Meerut. 2. The roots of the 1857 Revolt lay in: [a] Blatant discrimination against Indians by the British [b] Anger of the peasants on account of the exploitative land revenue policy [c] Oppression of the peasants by the corrupt governmental machinery and lower law courts 3. The reasons for the failure of the 1857 Revolt were: [a] The Revolt was localized and poorly organized [b] The resources of the British empire were far superior t those of the rebels [c] Some of the Indian princes actively helped the British in suppressing the Revolt. 4. The 1857 Revolt was the most intense in: [a] Western Bihar and Avadh [b] Rohilkhand and Delhi [c]Territory between the Chambal and the Narmada 5. The discontent of Nana Sahib, the adopted son of the deceased Peshwa Baji Rao against the British was due to their refusal to pay him. 6. The causes of the Revolt of 1857 were? [a] Annexation of Avadh 30Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
[b] Greased Catridges [c] Resentment among soldiers 7. The Annexation of Avadh in 1856 took place in the regime of Lord Dalhousie. 8. The governor-General of India during the revolt of 1857 was Lord Canning. 9. The educated middle class in India opposed the revolt of 1857. 10. The following were the grievances of the Indian soldiers against British? [a] The Indian soldiers were low paid [b] The soldiers were asked to go anywhere without extra allowances [c] The recruitment of low-caste people in the Bengal army which was composed mostly of high caste Hindus. 11. The annexation of Avadh by Lord Dalhousie in 1856 anger the company’s sepoys due to the following reasons [a]Most of the company’s sepoys came from Avadh [b]The sepoys felt that Dalhousie had no grounds for annexing Avadh [c]The sepoys had to pay higher taxes on the land their families held in Avadh
EKL Sudoku 111 Solution
6 2 4 1 9 7 3 8 5
9 7 5 8 3 6 2 1 4
8 3 1 2 4 5 9 7 6
5 9 3 6 7 1 8 4 2
4 6 8 5 2 3 7 9 1
7 1 2 4 8 9 6 5 3
1 8 9 3 6 4 5 2 7
3 5 7 9 1 2 4 6 8
2 4 6 7 5 8 1 3 9
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Governance Line
GATT - Uruguay Round Implications for India
The General Agreement of Tariff and Trade (GATT) was established in 1948 in Geneva to pursue the objective of free trade in order to encourage growth and development of all member countries. The principal purpose of GATT was the removal or reduction of trade barriers. The first seven rounds of negotiations conducted under GATT were aimed at stimulating international trade through reduction in tariff barriers and also by reduction in non-tariff restrictions on imports imposed by member countries. GATT did provide a useful forum for discussion and negotiations on international trade issues. The Uruguay Round of Negotiations – 8th Round of GATT The 8th round of multi-lateral Trade Negotiations, popularly known as Uruguay Round (since it was launched at punta del Este in Uruguay ) was started in September 1986 at a special session of GATT contracting parties held at Ministerial level. World trade had undergone a structural change during the four decades since the establishment of GATT in 1948. The share of agriculture in world merchandise trade which was 46 per cent in 1950 had declined to 13 per cent in 1987. Simultaneously, the structure of employment and the contribution of various sectors to GDP of developed countries had undergone a qualitative change. The share of the service sector in the GDP of developed countries was rapidly increasing. It ranged between 50 to 70 per cent of the GDP by 1986. The share of employment in the service sector was also increasing. For instance, in USA, service represented two-thirds of GDP and employed over 70 per cent of work force. In 1980, US exports of services amounted to $35 billion. In the commodity sector, the comparative cost advantages had moved in favour of Japan and several other newly industrialized nations. These factors impelled developed countries, under the leadership of USA to take the initiative of bringing service sector into trade negotiations. Thus, the Uruguay Round (UR) contained the mandate to have negotiations in 15 areas. In Part I, negotiations on Trade in Goods were to be conducted in 14 areas and in Part II negotiations on Trade in services were to be carried out. 32Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Part-I (Trade in Goods) declaration in UR contained the following:
1. Tariffs 2. Non-Tariffs measures 3. Tropical products 4. Natural resource-based products 5. Textiles and clothing 6. Agriculture 7. GATT articles 8. Safeguards 9. MTN(Multilateral Trade Negotiations) agreements and arrangements 10. Subsidies and Countervailing measures 11. Dispute settlement 12. Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) 13. Trade Related Investment Measures (TRIMs) 14. Functioning of the GATT systems (FOGS)
Thus, besides the traditional GATT subjects such as tariff and nontariff barriers and improvement in GATT rules and disciplines on subsidies and countervailing measures, anti-dumping measures etc. certain new areas such as Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual property Rights (TRIPs),Trade Related Investment Measures ( TRIMs) and Trade in Services were included for the first time of negotiations. These negotiations were expected to be concluded in four years, but on account of differences in participating countries on certain critical areas, such as agriculture, textiles, TRIPs and anti-dumping measures, agreement could not be reached. To break this deadlock, Mr.Arthur Dunkel, Director General of GATT compiled a very detailed document, popularly known as Dunkel Proposals and presented it before the member- countries as a compromise document. The Dunkel Proposals culminated into the Final Act on December 15, 1993 and India signed the agreement along with 117 nations on Aprils 15,1994. Uruguay Round Final Act and its Implications for India A big offensive was launched by the left parties, the Janata Dal and the Bharatiya Janata Party against the acceptance of Dunkel proposals. The basic against the acceptance of Dunkel proposals. The basic thrust of the attack was that the Government has surrendered its sovereignty under pressure from the US Government and the multinationals. There is no doubt that some of the criticisms were politically motivated and value – loaded, and it would be correct to say that to some extent, they were misleading. February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines33
On the other hand, there is no doubt that the claim of the Government of India, that as a consequence of UR agreement, Indian exports would rise at the rate of $2 billion per year is exaggerated Reduction in Basic Duty and Export Subsidies On tariffs, India has promised to reduce the basic duty by 30%. This duty reduction was to be effected over a period of 6 years and was to cover new materials intermediates and capital goods. This, however, did not include agricultural products, petroleum products. Fertilizers and some non-ferrous metals like zinc and copper. These tariff reductions were also a part of the package of economic reforms undertaken in India and had been recommended by the Chelliah Committee. The GATT agreement stipulates that anti-dumping proceedings will be terminated if the volume of dumped imports from a particular country is less than 1% of the domestic market. The only exception is instances where dumping countries collectively account for more than 2.5 per cent of the domestic market. Anti-dumping proceedings will be terminated if the margin of dumping is less than 2%. These clauses do help India to protect its exports from anti-dumping investigations. It would have been much better for India had the figure of dumped imports as a share of domestic market been more than 1%. Regarding the prohibitions of exports subsidies, GATT agreement stipulates that countries like India with per capita income less than $1,000 are exempt from the removal of such subsidies for product where their share in world trade is less than 3.25 per cent. Using this criterion, India’s share exceeds in rice, tea, iron ore, leather manufactures, gems and jewelleries. All these items taken together account for only 22.8 per cent of India’s exports. This implies that 77 per cent of exports are not covered by GATT Agreement. Thus, reduction of export subsidies or their removal is not likely to produce any disastrous effect on our exports, as alleged by many critics.
The activity you are most avoiding contains your biggest opportunity.
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Abraham Lincoln’s Letter to his Son’s Teacher Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter to his son’s teacher on his first day of schooling in order to just send a gentle reminder of what he wants the teacher to teach his son so that he can be a good person in the future. The Letter “My son starts school today. It is all going to be strange and new to him for a while and I wish you would treat him gently. It is an adventure that might take him across continents. All adventures that probably include wars, tragedy and sorrow. To live this life will require faith, love and courage. So dear Teacher, will you please take him by his hand and teach him things he will have to know, teaching him – but gently, if you can, Teach him that for every enemy, there is a friend. He will have to know that all men are not just, that all men are not true. But teach him also that for every scoundrel there is a hero, that for every crooked politician, there is a dedicated leader. Teach him if you can that 10 cents earned is of far more value than a dollar found. In school, teacher, it is far more honorable to fail than to cheat. Teach him to learn how to gracefully lose, and enjoy winning when he does win. Teach him to be gentle with people, tough with tough people. Steer him away from envy if you can and teach him the secret of quiet laughter. Teach him if you can –how to laugh when he is sad, teach him there is no shame in tears. Teach him there can be glory in failure and despair in success. Teach him to scoff at cynics. Teach him if you can the wonders of books, but also give time to ponder the extreme mystery of birds in the sky, bees in the sun and flowers on a green hill. Teach him to have faith in his own ideas, even if every one tell him they are wrong. Try to give my son the strength not to follow the crowd when everyone else is doing it. Teach him to listen to every one, but teach him also to filter all that he hears on a screen of truth and take only the good that comes through. Teach him to sell his talents and brains to the highest bidder but never to put a price tag on his heart and soul. Let him have the courage to be impatient, let him have the patient to be brave. Teach him to have sublime faith in himself, because then he will always have sublime faith in manking, in God. This is the order, teacher but see what best you can do. He is such a nice little boy and he is my son.” 36Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Energy Line
Morocco
Country with Highest Solar Power Potential Morocco is a country having one of the highest rates of solar insolation of any country — about 3,000 hours per year of sunshine but up to 3,600 hours in the desert. And now Morocco has launched one of the world’s largest concentrated solar power plant costing an estimated $9 billion. The aim of the project is to create 2,000 megawatts of solar generation capacity by the year 2020. Five solar power stations are to be constructed, including both photovoltaic and concentrated solar power technology. The Moroccan Agency for Solar Energy (MASEN), a public-private venture, has been established to lead the project. The first plant will be commissioned in 2015, and the entire project in 2020. Once completed, the solar project will provide 38% of Morocco’s annual electricity generation. Morocco, the only African country to have a power cable link to Europe, aims to benefit from the $573.8 bn expected to come from this ambitious pan-continental Desertec Industrial Initiative. A global audience will be watching this solar project with great interest, it is expected. There are times to plant, and there are times to let the fields of your farm lay fallow. The wise farmer understands the time to plant, and the wise farmer understands the time to let those fields be fallow. - Robin Sharma February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines37
A Quick Look In this column we take a quick look at some world renowned books & magazines and select a few noteworthy sentences, which are given under the title: Miscellany...The selection is based on brevity, simplicity, style, information content etc. Next, we present pointers to certain most relevant articles appearing in leading magazines like The Economist, TIME, FORTUNE, SPECTRUM, Harvard Business Review, SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, THE FUTURIST, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC etc.
Finally, the highlights of some classic books are also included. Readers are also welcome to send similar items to be included in future issues of EKL for the benefit of other readers. (email: eklines@gmail.com) - Editorial Team • • • •
Mi s c e l l a n y. . . Degrees of global warming: 3.5 Degree C is how much global temperature would rise by 2100 even if nations meet initial Paris pledges to reduce carbon emissions. Earth's gravity means that the blood pressure in our feet is about three times higher than in our head. An object that is a perfect absorber of radiation is called a Black Body and if it is hot, it becomes a perfect emitter of radiation. A drug that dramatically extends your life span could be on pharmacy shelves is as little as 10 to 20 years, according to scientists at University College London. Articles
Finding our Path: Indians have the potential to reshape every industry, but in order for us to lead the next industrial revolution we also must embrace our own creative confidence. Author: Vishal Sikka, CEO and MD of Infosys. Magazine: FORBES India, New Year Special, January 22, 2016. The New Food Rules: Don't worry so much about protein; Fiber is "absolutely without a doubt" the thing humans need to eat more of; Stay away from zero-calorie foods and drinks; There is new evidence that refined carbohydrates quickly raise insulin levels. Magazine: TIME December 28, 2015 - January 4, 2016. 38Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Books
Superforecasting: The Art and Science of Prediction Authors: Philip Tetlock and Dan Gardner Publisher: Crown Publishers 2015 The techniques and habits of mind set out in this book are a gift to anyone who has to think about what the future might bring. It tells an exciting story of ordinary people beating experts in a very serious game. It is also a manual for thinking clearly in an uncertain world. Humans Need Not Apply: A Guide to Wealth and Work in the Age of Artificial Intelligence Author: Jerry Kaplan Publisher: Yale University Press 2015 Jerry Kaplan unpacks the latest advances in robotics, machine learning, and perception powering systems that rival or exceed human capabilities.
I Got Him A truck driver frequently travelled through a small town where there was a court house at the side of the road and lawyers walking along the road. The truck driver made it a practice to hit the pedestrian lawyers with his truck as he sped by. One day, he spotted a priest walking along the road and stopped to give him a ride. A little further along as he approached the town, he spotted a lawyer walking along the side of the road. Automatically, he veered his truck towards the lawyer, but... then he remembered his passenger. He swerved back to the center, but he heard a "whump" and in the rear view mirror he spotted the lawyer rolling across the field. He turned to the priest and said, " father, I'm sure that I didn't hit that lawyer", and the priest replied, "that's OK, my son, I got him with the door". February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines39
Tech Line
Batteries, Beware! Hydrogen Fuel Cells to Take Over A UK-based energy company, Intelligent Energy, is laying plans for a consumer electronics future that would employ hydrogen fuel cells instead of batteries in mobile phones, laptops, tablets, and even drones. At the recent Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2016, in Las Vegas, it showed off two iPhones, a laptop, a Surface Pro 3 tablet computer, and a drone - all powered by hydrogen. “This device gives you the power to charge your phone for a week,” Julian Hughes, acting managing director for Intelligent Energy’s Consumer Electronics Div, told Design News. “And with the easy exchange of a cartridge, it can go another week, so you never need grid power.” Intelligent Energy’s fuel cell-based portable power source called Upp has been available in Apple stores in the UK since late 2014. Its effort to change that current status quo, however, will rely heavily on its success with consumer electronics manufacturers. Ultimately, Intelligent Energy’s engineers foresee the company's fuel cells making in-roads in wearables, sensor-based systems and Internet of Things applications. At CES, Intelligent Energy also showed off a drone that uses fuel cells as a range extender, pushing the available flight time from 15 minutes (by battery) to almost two hours. “[The drone] industry is crying out for a solution to the need for extended flight time,” Hughes noted. For now, the company said it will focus its consumer electronics efforts on drones, mobile phones and portable computers. “We’re at the start of a journey into consumer electronics,” Hughes said. “We know there are a host of applications we can go after, but right now we need to focus on two or three applications and later we can go after the rest." [For details: http://www.beupp.com/] 40Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Tech Line
Talking Car Technologies Among the New Research Initiatives in UK Eight new projects have been awarded £20 million in funding by UK government to research and develop enhanced communication between vehicles and roadside infrastructure or urban information systems, including new ‘talking car technologies’. They range from developing autonomous shuttles to carry visually-impaired passengers using advanced sensors and control systems, to new simulation trials for autonomous pods to increase uptake and improve real-world trials. Trials to test driverless cars on the streets are currently being worked on in Bristol, Coventry and Milton Keynes, and Greenwich. Autonomous vehicles are also being used in Heathrow to shuttle passengers, although these are currently on designated tracks. The UK has a rich fabric of scientists and engineers who have established the UK as pioneers in the research and development of connected and autonomous vehicles. The 8 collaborative R&D projects to receive funding are: 1. UK Connected Intelligent Transport Environment (UKCITE): a project to create the most advanced environment for testing connected and autonomous vehicles. It involves equipping over 40 miles of urban roads, dual-carriageways and motorways with combinations of 3 “talking car technologies” and testing for a fourth, known as LTE-V. The project will establish how this technology can improve journeys; reduce traffic congestion; and provide entertainment and safety services through better connectivity. (Total project: £5.6 million; BIS funding: £3.4 million; duration: 30 months; consortium members: Visteon Engineering Services Limited, Jaguar Land Rover Ltd, Coventry City Council, Siemens PLC, Vodafone Group Services Ltd, Huawei Technologies (UK) Co Ltd, HORIBA MIRA Ltd, Coventry University, University of Warwick (WMG), Highways England Company Ltd.) 2. Insight: a project to develop driverless shuttles with advanced sensors and control systems and trial them in city pedestrian areas, with a particular focus on improving urban accessibility for disabled and visually-impaired people. (£2.2 million; £1.5 million; 36 months; Westfield Sportscars Limited, Heathrow Enterprises Ltd, Fusion Processing Ltd, Creative February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines41
Example Ltd, Conigital Ltd, Birmingham City University.) 3. Tools for autonomous logistics operations and management: this project is a collaboration bringing together transport modellers and the computer games industry to develop new modelling and help improve the return on investment into Connected and Autonomous Vehicle fleets significantly. (£3.2 million; £2 million; 36 months; Immense Simulations Ltd, Improbable Ltd.) 4. FLOURISH: this project will help develop innovative new tools to improve the understanding of user needs and expectations of connected and autonomous vehicles. It will be based in the Bristol City Region and will test capabilities in both urban and suburban networked environments. (£5.5 million; £3.7 million; 36 months; Atkins Limited, Age UK, Airbus Group Limited, React AI Ltd (Aiseedo), AXA UK plc, Bristol City Council, Imtech Traffic & Infra UK Limited, Office for Public Management Ltd, South Gloucestershire Council, Designability, Transport Systems Catapult, TSS - Transport Simulation Systems Ltd, University of Bristol, University of the West of England, Bristol 5. MOVE-UK: this project will be focused on accelerating the development, market readiness and deployment of automated driving systems. (£5.5 million; £3.4 million; 36 months; Bosch, Jaguar Land Rover Limited, TRL Limited, The Floow Limited, Direct Line Insurance, Royal Borough of Greenwich.) 6. INnovative Testing of Autonomous Control Techniques (INTACT): this project will reduce the cost of testing and evaluating autonomous control systems in a safe, repeatable, controlled and scientifically rigorous environment. (£1 million; £850k; 24 months; Richmond Design and Marketing Ltd, University of Warwick.) 7. Pathway to Autonomous Commercial Vehicles: this project will develop an innovative solution to monitor key information from the vehicle and predict safety risks based on analytics. It will build on a prototype which monitors tyre pressures and temperatures in commercial vehicles, combined with always-on network connection. (£1.2 million; £900k; 24 months; Tructyre Fleet Management Ltd, University of Portsmouth, Satellite Applications Catapult, RL Automotive.) i-MOTORS - Intelligent Mobility for Future Cities Transport Systems: i-MOTORS will deliver a connected Vehicle to Anything (V2X) system via a mobile platform as a proof of concept. In addition, the project will develop hardware which will receive and analyse sensory data in real-time from multiple locations via online cloud technology to raise the standard of data-processing in the connected and autonomous driving industry. 42Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Books Scan The Vital Question: Why Is Life the Way It Is? Author: Nick Lane Publisher: Profile Books Ltd. London 2015
Why is life the way it is? Bacteria evolved into complex life just once in four billion years of life on earth - and all complex life shares many strange properties, from sex to ageing and death. If life evolved on other planets, would it be the same or completely different? In the The Vital Question, Nick Lane radically reframes evolutionary history, putting forward a cogent solution to conundrums that have troubled scientists for decades. The answer, he argues, lies in energy: how all life on Earth lives off a voltage with the strength of a bolt of lightning. In unravelling these scientific enigmas, making sense of life's quirks, Lane's explanation provides a solution to life's vital questions: why are we as we are, and why are we here at all? This is ground-breaking science in an accessible form, in the tradition of Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species, Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene, and Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs and Steel. Contents: 4. The emergence of cells Introduction: Why is life the way it is? Part III - Complexity Part I - The Problem 5. The origin of complex cells 1. What is life? 6. Sex and the origins of death 2. What is living? Part IV - Predictions Part II - The origin of life 7. The power and the glory 3. Energy at life's origin Epilogue: From the deep.
Solitude allows you to think. And to get to know who you truly are. With that awareness, you can elevate.
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Books Scan Economics Rules: The Rights and Wrongs of the Dismal Science Author: Dani Rodrik, the Ford Foundation Professor of International Political Economy at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. Publisher: W. W. Norton and Company Inc. New York October 2015 In the wake of the financial crisis and the Great Recession, economics seems anything but a science. In this sharp, masterfully argued book, Dani Rodrik, a leading critic from within, takes a close look at economics to examine when it falls short and when it works, to give a surprisingly upbeat account of the discipline. Drawing on the history of the field and his deep experience as a practitioner, Rodrik argues that economics can be a powerful tool that improves the world-but only when economists abandon universal theories and focus on getting the context right. Economics Rules argues that the discipline's much-derided mathematical models are its true strength. Models are the tools that make economics a science. Too often, however, economists mistake a model for the model that applies everywhere and at all times. In six chapters that trace his discipline from Adam Smith to present-day work on globalization, Rodrik shows how diverse situations call for different models. Each model tells a partial story about how the world works. These stories offer wide-ranging, and sometimes contradictory, lessons-just as children’s fables offer diverse morals. Whether the question concerns the rise of global inequality, the consequences of free trade, or the value of deficit spending, Rodrik explains how using the right models can deliver valuable new insights about social reality and public policy. Beyond the science, economics requires the craft to apply suitable models to the context. The 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers challenged many economists' deepest assumptions about free markets. Rodrik reveals that economists' model toolkit is much richer than these free-market models. With pragmatic model selection, economists can develop successful antipoverty programs in Mexico, growth strategies in Africa, and intelligent remedies for domestic inequality. At once a forceful critique and defense of the discipline, Economics Rules charts a path toward a more humble but more effective science. Contents: • Introduction: The Use and Misuse of Economic Ideas • What Models Do • The Science of Economic Modeling • Navigating among Models • Models and Theories • When Economists Go Wrong • Economics and its Critics • The Twenty Commandments 44Executive Knowledge LinesFebruary 2016
Journals Scan FORBES INDIA - Hope 2016 January 22, 2016 This New Year Special issue presents a lineup of India's finest minds - across sectors and disciplines - who share their views on what 2016 could hold for the country. They convey a sense of optimism that, despite the problems, there is enough firepower to ensure that the economy will be on the road to prosperity. According to Shashi Tharoor MP, India's fundamentals are positive. In 2016 the government is expected to clear more policy roadblocks to ensure that the energy of India's youth and enterprise unleashed in spectacular fashion on the world stage. The following leaders present their views: RC Bhargava Uday Kotak Kris Gopalakrishnan Vishal Sikka Ashok Wadhwa Preetha Reddy Mark Mobius Anil Swarup Shashi Tharoor Highlights of Features: • Enabled bureaucracy, quicker decisions • Finding our path • The seeds of structural changes will bear fruit • The stars are aligning • Retail (And consumers) will be king • It is a marathon, not sprint • Poised to accelerate • Today's promise, tomorrow's pride • A favourable combination of factors • Time to wage war against diseases • On the right track • Staying on solid ground • Connectivity for inclusive growth • Build on a strong 2015 • 2016, like 2015, won't be horrid • Ten big ideas to change the world • The first woman of women February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines45
Journals Scan The Economist December 5th - 11th 2015 Carbon Capture and Storage is a topic talked much in environmental circles these days. This involves gathering up the CO2 made by burning fossil fuels and stuffing it in underground caverns or bespoke crystalline materials where it can not abet climate change. Such schemes tend to be complex, costly and risky. Highlights of Contents: • The Speed of business Hyperac-
tive, yet passive
• Criminal Justice in Japan • India's diamond polishers • Climate change - Raise the
green lanterns
• Stars and morals • Censorship - Freeze: the new • • • • •
normal Enlightened agriculture Tetrafobia - Fear of four Iraq's Shia Muslims South African universities Children in prison
Corporate crime Swiss scandals Pipelines in America The rise of hackathons Commercial drones Male grooming in South Korea Emerging-market banks Sustainable pensions American health insurers Facebook and philanthropy Climate diplomacy Carbon capture and storage Microbes and thermoregulation • Gene editing • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Sometimes it looks like your dreams won’t come true but that’s just because better ones are on the way.
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The Last Word Your life is your autobiography. Write an epic. - Robin Sharma Owned, Edited, Printed, and Published by N T Nair, 186, PTP Nagar, Trivandrum 695 038 Printed by Akshara Offset, TC 25/ 3230(1), Vanchiyoor, Trivandrum 695 035 Published at Trivandrum. Editor: N T Nair February 2016 Executive Knowledge Lines47
Executive Knowledge Lines monthly Registered RNI No. KERENG/2005/16316 Posting Date: 11th & 12th of every month Date of Publishing: 8-2-2016 Posted at: RMS, Trivandrum
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